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The Chisholm Trail ( /ˈt͡ʃɪzəm/ CHIZ -əm ) was a trail used in the post- Civil War era to drive cattle overland from ranches in southern Texas, crossed the Red River into Indian Territory , and ended at Kansas rail stops. The trail encompassed a pathway established by Black Beaver in 1861, and a wagon road established by Jesse Chisholm around 1864. "The Chisholm Wagon Road went from Chisholm's trading post on the South Canadian (north of Fort Arbuckle to the Cimarron River crossing, to the Arkansas River at the future site of Wichita where Chisholm had another trading post and on north to Abilene ," according to the Kraisingers. By 1869, the entire trail from Texas to Kansas became known as the Chisholm Trail.

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64-656: Katy Park was a baseball park located in Waco, Texas , and was used by many minor league baseball teams as well as the Baylor Bears for a short time. The ballpark was located at the corner of Eighth Street and Webster Avenue. It was razed for a junkyard. The Katy Field site is now Katy Ballpark and comprises one of many locations within Magnolia Market at the Silos. The building that houses Magnolia Press Coffee Company

128-766: A civil engineer based in New York, for the supervisory engineering work. The economic effects of the Waco bridge were immediate and large. The cowboys and cattle-herds following the Chisholm Trail north, crossed the Brazos River at Waco. Some chose to pay the Suspension Bridge toll, while others floated their herds down the river. The population of Waco grew rapidly, as immigrants now had a safe crossing for their horse-drawn carriages and wagons. Since 1971,

192-535: A local farm team for recruits to the Chicago Cubs. On the night of August 6, 1930, baseball history was made at Katy Park: in the eighth inning of a night game against Beaumont , Waco left fielder Gene Rye became the only player in the history of professional baseball to hit three home runs in one inning. The last year Waco had a team in the Texas League was 1930, but fielded some strong semipro teams in

256-471: A midseason ownership change in 2004. (The team became the beleaguered Cincinnati Marshals the following year.) The Waco Wizards of the now-defunct Western Professional Hockey League fared better, lasting into a fourth season before folding in 2000. Both teams played at the Heart O' Texas Coliseum , one of Waco's largest entertainment and sports venues. The Southern Indoor Football League announced that Waco

320-528: A record of 13–11. The women's basketball team won the NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament in 2005, 2012 and 2019. The men's basketball team won the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament in 2021 . The Waco BlueCats, an independent minor league baseball team, planned to play in the inaugural season of the Southwest League of Professional Baseball in 2019. A new ballpark

384-556: A reservation in Oklahoma with other Wichita tribes. In 1902, the Waco received allotments of land and became official US citizens. Neil McLennan settled in an area near the South Bosque River in 1838. Jacob De Cordova bought McLennan's property and hired a former Texas Ranger and surveyor named George B. Erath to inspect the area. In 1849, Erath designed the first block of the city. Property owners wanted to name

448-705: A tortoise, a camel and a sabretooth tiger. Downtown Waco is home to Magnolia Market , a shopping complex containing specialty stores, food trucks , and event space, set in repurposed grain silos originally built in 1950 for the Brazos Valley Cotton Oil Company. The Magnolia Market, operated by Chip and Joanna Gaines of the HGTV TV series Fixer Upper , saw 1.2 million visitors in 2016. The Baylor Bears athletics teams compete in Waco. The football team has won or tied for nine conference titles, and have played in 24 bowl games, garnering

512-512: A white woman, to which he confessed. About 15,000 spectators, mostly citizens of Waco, were present. The commonly named Waco Horror drew international condemnation and became the cause célèbre of the nascent NAACP 's anti- lynching campaign. In 2006, the Waco City Council officially condemned the lynching, which took place without opposition from local political or judicial leaders; the mayor and chief of police were spectators. On

576-632: Is a public art installation along the banks of the Brazos River. A nine-foot bronze statue of Miller was unveiled on December 7, 2017, temporarily located at nearby Bledsoe-Miller Park. Waco Mammoth National Monument is a partnership between the City of Waco, Baylor University, the Waco Mammoth Foundation and the National Park Service . The site contains the fossils of 24 Columbian mammoths and other animals, including

640-532: Is covered by water. The total area is 11.85% water. Downtown Waco is relatively small when compared to other larger Texas cities, such as Houston , Dallas , San Antonio , or even Fort Worth , El Paso , or Austin . The 22-story ALICO Building , completed in 1910, is the tallest building in Waco. Waco experiences a humid subtropical climate ( Köppen climate classification Cfa ), characterized by hot summers and generally mild winters. Some 90 °F (32 °C) temperatures have been observed in every month of

704-652: Is home to the Waco Scottish Rite of Freemasonry . The Waco Mammoth National Monument is a paleontological site and museum managed by the National Park Service in conjunction with the City of Waco and Baylor University. Other museums in Waco include the Dr Pepper Museum , Texas Sports Hall of Fame , Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum , Historic Waco and the Mayborn Museum Complex . Notable attractions in Waco include

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768-474: Is located almost directly on the spot where Katy Field's fence stood in deepest center field. Waco, Texas Waco ( / ˈ w eɪ k oʊ / WAY -koh ) is a city in and the county seat of McLennan County, Texas , United States. It is situated along the Brazos River and I-35 , halfway between Dallas and Austin . The city had a U.S. census estimated 2023 population of 144,816, making it

832-474: Is some Brandy and Sugar to have Ice Toddy. They have about 400 acres (1.6 km ) planted in corn, beans, pumpkins, and melons and that tended in good order. I think they cannot raise more than One Hundred Warriors. After further violence, Austin halted an attempt to destroy their village in retaliation. In 1825, he made a treaty with them. The Waco were eventually pushed out of the region, settling north near present-day Fort Worth . In 1872, they were moved onto

896-476: The 24th-most populous city in the state . The Waco metropolitan statistical area consists of McLennan, Falls and Bosque counties, which had a 2020 population of 295,782. Bosque County was added to the Waco MSA in 2023. The 2023 U.S. census population estimate for the Waco metropolitan area was 304,865 residents. Indigenous peoples occupied areas along the river for thousands of years. In historic times,

960-611: The Hawaiian Falls water park and the Grand Lodge of Texas , one of the largest Grand Lodges in the world. The Waco Suspension Bridge is a single-span suspension bridge built in 1870, crossing the Brazos River . Indian Spring Park marks the location of the origin of the town of Waco, where the Huaco Indians had settled on the bank of the river, at the location of an icy cold spring. The Doris Miller Memorial

1024-538: The Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad company (known as M-K-T or "Katy"), featuring two locomotives intentionally set to a head-on collision. Meant to be a family fun event with food, games, and entertainment, the Crash turned deadly when both boilers exploded simultaneously, sending metal flying in the air. Three people died and dozens were injured. An African American man named Sank Majors was hanged from

1088-545: The National Park Service . On February 28, 1993, a shootout occurred in which six Branch Davidians and four agents of the United States Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms died. After 51 days, on April 19, 1993, the standoff ended when the Branch Davidians' facility, referred to as Mt. Carmel , was set ablaze, thirteen miles from Waco. 74 people, including leader David Koresh , died in

1152-648: The Steers . In 1920, the team was sold to Wichita Falls . In 1923, a new franchise called the Indians was formed and became a member of the Class D level Texas Association . In 1925, Waco rejoined the Texas League with the formation of the Waco Cubs . On June 20, 1930, the first night game in Texas League history was played at Katy Park in Waco. The lights were donated by Waco resident Charles Redding Turner, who owned

1216-481: The Washington Avenue Bridge by a white mob in 1905. Another man, Jim Lawyer, was attacked with a whip because he objected to the lynching . In both cases the mob was assisted by Texas Rangers . In 1916, a Black teenager named Jesse Washington was tortured, mutilated, and burned to death in the town square by a mob that seized him from the courthouse, where he had been convicted of murdering

1280-596: The 1930s and early 1940s. During the World War II years of 1943–1945, the powerful Waco Army Air Field team was probably the best in the state; many major leaguers played for the team, and it was managed by big-league catcher Birdie Tebbetts . Chisholm Trail Texas ranchers using the Chisholm Trail had their cowboys start cattle drives from either the Rio Grande area or San Antonio . They joined

1344-664: The Chisholm Trail at the Red River, at the border between Texas and Oklahoma Territory . They continued north to the rail head of the Kansas Pacific Railway in Abilene, Kansas , where the cattle would be sold and shipped eastward. The trail is named for Jesse Chisholm, a multiracial trader from Tennessee of Cherokee and Scottish descent. Together with scout Black Beaver, he developed the trail to transport his goods from one trading post to another. The two men were

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1408-485: The Chisholm Trail to bring a herd of 2,400 head from Texas to Abilene. This herd was the first of an estimated 5,000,000 head of Texas cattle to reach Kansas over the Chisholm Trail. McCoy's stockyards shipped 35,000 head in 1867 and became the largest stockyards west of Kansas City, Kansas. The construction of the Union Pacific Railway through Nebraska eventually offered a cattle drive destination that

1472-542: The Chisholm Trail, including: The Chisholm Trail is roughly traced by U.S. Route 81 through Oklahoma, and that state has multiple museums and sites paying respect to the trail. The Chisholm Trail Heritage Center in Duncan, Oklahoma has educational and interactive exhibits, a large monument depicting a scene from a Chisholm Trail cattle drive, and a trail walkway. Trail Ruts at Monument Hill just outside of Duncan has visible traces of cattle hoofs and wagons actually left on

1536-555: The Chisholm Trail. Margaret Borland took her family, hired hands, and 2,500 Longhorns through the trail in 1873 in search of profit for her cattle, which was worth triple in Kansas over Texas prices. She died from what was called trail fever just after arriving in Wichita, after an otherwise successful journey. The cattle drives have been a popular topic among Western genre movies. At least 27 movies have portrayed fictional accounts of

1600-587: The Cotton Belt. In the late 19th century, a red-light district called the "Reservation" grew up in Waco, and prostitution was regulated by the city. The Reservation was suppressed in the early 20th century. In 1885, the soft drink Dr Pepper was invented in Waco at Morrison's Old Corner Drug Store. In 1845, Baylor University was founded in Independence , Texas. It moved to Waco in 1886 and merged with Waco University, becoming an integral part of

1664-714: The Greater Waco Chamber of Commerce, the top employers in McLennan County are: Waco is served by the Waco-McLennan County Library system. The Armstrong Browning Library , on the campus of Baylor University , houses collections of English poets Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning . The Red Men Museum and Library houses the archives of the Improved Order of Red Men . The Lee Lockwood Library and Museum

1728-614: The area of present-day Waco was occupied by the Wichita Indian tribe known as the " Waco " (Spanish: Hueco or Huaco ). In 1824, Thomas M. Duke was sent to explore the area after violence erupted between the Waco people and the European settlers. His report to Stephen F. Austin , described the Waco village: This town is situated on the West Bank of the river . They have a spring almost as cold as ice itself. All we want

1792-609: The blaze. During the presidency of George W. Bush , Waco was the home to the White House Press Center. The press center provided briefing and office facilities for the press corps whenever Bush visited his " Western White House " Prairie Chapel Ranch near Crawford , about 25 miles (40 km) northwest of Waco. On May 17, 2015, a violent dispute among rival biker gangs broke out at Twin Peaks restaurant. The Waco police intervened, with nine dead and 18 injured in

1856-583: The bridge has been open only to pedestrian traffic and is in the National Register of Historic Places . Waco was the original intended western terminus of the Texas and St. Louis Railway , with the town having been reached in 1881. However, the line was extended further west to Gatesville a year later. This trackage later became the core of the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company , commonly known as

1920-578: The centenary of the lynching, May 15, 2016, the mayor apologized in a ceremony to some of Washington's descendants. A historical marker is being erected. In the 1920s, despite the popularity of the Ku Klux Klan and high numbers of lynchings throughout Texas, Waco's authorities attempted to respond to the NAACP's campaign and institute more protections for African Americans or others threatened with mob violence and lynching. On May 26, 1922, Jesse Thomas

1984-458: The city Lamartine, but Erath convinced them to name the area Waco Village, after the Indians who had lived there. In March 1849, Shapley Prince Ross, the father of future Governor Lawrence Sullivan Ross , built the first house in Waco, a double-log cabin, on a bluff overlooking the springs. His daughter Kate was the first settler child born in Waco. Because of this, Ross is considered to have been

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2048-517: The city was $ 26,264, and for a family was $ 33,919. Males had a median income of $ 26,902 versus $ 21,159 for females. The per capita income for the city was $ 14,584. About 26.3% of the population and 19.3% of families lived below the poverty line . Of the total population, 30.9% of those under the age of 18 and 13.0% of those 65 and older lived below the poverty line. A 2020 census showed on a heat map that McLennan County displayed an estimated 1.3% of partnered households that are same-sex. According to

2112-582: The city. The university's Strecker Museum was also the oldest continuously operating museum in the state until it closed in 2003, and the collections moved to the new Mayborn Museum Complex . In 1873, AddRan College was founded by brothers Addison and Randolph Clark in Fort Worth. The school moved to Waco in 1895, changing its name to Add-Ran Christian University and taking up residence in the empty buildings of Waco Female College. Add-Ran changed its name to Texas Christian University in 1902 and left Waco after

2176-580: The confluence of the Brazos and Bosque Rivers . Excavations revealed the bones were 68,000 years old and belonged to a species of mammoth . Eventually, the remains of at least 24 mammoths, one camel, and one large cat were found at the site, making it one of the largest findings of its kind. Scholars have puzzled over why such a large herd had been killed at once. The bones are on display at the Waco Mammoth National Monument , part of

2240-560: The deadliest in Texas state history. It was the first tornado tracked by radar and helped spur the creation of a nationwide storm surveillance system. A granite monument featuring the names of those killed was placed downtown in 2004. In 1964, the Texas Department of Public Safety designated Waco as the site for the state-designated official museum of the legendary Texas Rangers law enforcement agency founded in 1823. In 1976, it

2304-563: The electric chair. In the same year, the Texas Legislature created the Tenth Civil Court of Appeals and placed it in Waco; it is now known as the 10th Court of Appeals . In 1937, Grover C. Thomsen and R. H. Roark created a soft-drink called "Sun Tang Red Cream Soda". This would become known as the soft drink Big Red . On May 5, 1942, Waco Army Air Field opened as a basic pilot training school, and on June 10, 1949,

2368-780: The end of the Civil War, most cattle were being moved up the western branch of trail, being gathered at Red River Station in Montague County, Texas . In 1866, cattle in Texas were worth $ 4 per head, compared to over $ 40 per head in the North and East . Lack of market access during the Civil War had produced an overstock of cattle in Texas. In 1867, Joseph G. McCoy built stockyards in Abilene, Kansas. He encouraged Texas cattlemen to drive their herds to his stockyards. O. W. Wheeler answered McCoy's call, and he along with partners used

2432-595: The end of the trail moved to other cities. The end of the trail moved to Newton and soon afterward to Wichita . From 1883 to 1887, the end of the trail was at Caldwell . On the long trips—up to two months—the cattlemen faced many difficulties. They had to cross major rivers such as the Arkansas and the Red and innumerable smaller creeks, as well as handle the topographic challenges of canyons , badlands and low mountain ranges. The major drives typically needed to start in

2496-481: The first Cotton Palace fair and exhibition center was built to reflect the dominant contribution of the agricultural cotton industry in the region. Since the end of the Civil War , cotton had been cultivated in the Brazos and Bosque valleys, and Waco had become known nationwide as a top producer. Over the next 23 years, the annual exposition would welcome over eight million attendees. The opulent building which housed

2560-457: The first drive along the Chisholm Trail, including The Texans (1938), directed by James P. Hogan and starring Randolph Scott and Joan Bennett ; and Red River (1948), directed by Howard Hawks and starring John Wayne and Montgomery Clift . Walter Brennan co-starred in both films. The trail is the subject of at least two pop songs: " The Last Cowboy Song ," written and recorded by Ed Bruce , also performed by The Highwaymen ; and

2624-503: The first to drive cattle north along this route. By 1853, Texas cattle were being driven into Missouri . Local farmers began blocking the herds and turning them back because the Texas Longhorns carried ticks that caused diseases in other species of cattle. Violence, vigilante groups, and cattle rustling caused further problems for the drovers . By 1859, the driving of cattle was outlawed in many Missouri jurisdictions. By

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2688-592: The founder of Waco, Texas. In 1866, Waco's leading citizens embarked on an ambitious project to build the first bridge to span the wide Brazos River . They formed the Waco Bridge Company to build the 475-foot (145 m) brick Waco Suspension Bridge , which was completed in 1870. The company commissioned a firm owned by John Augustus Roebling in Trenton , New Jersey, to supply the bridge's cables and steelwork and contracted with Mr. Thomas M. Griffith,

2752-432: The highly successful Iconoclast newspaper in Waco. One of his targets was Baylor University. Brann revealed Baylor officials had been trafficking South American children recruited by missionaries and making house-servants out of them. Brann was shot in the back by Tom Davis, a Baylor supporter. Brann then wheeled, drew his pistol, and killed Davis. Brann was helped home by his friends, and died there of his wounds. In 1894,

2816-551: The incident. More than 170 were arrested. No bystanders, Twin Peak employees, or officers were killed. This was the most high-profile criminal incident since the Waco siege, and the deadliest shootout in the city's history. According to the United States Census Bureau , the city has an area of 95.5 square miles (247 km ), of which 84.2 square miles (218 km ) is land and 11.3 square miles (29 km )

2880-563: The month-long exhibition was destroyed by fire and rebuilt in 1910. In 1931, the exposition fell prey to the Great Depression , and the building was torn down. However, the annual Cotton Palace Pageant continues, hosted in late April in conjunction with the Brazos River Festival. On September 15, 1896, "The Crash" took place about 15 miles (24 km) north of Waco. "The Crash at Crush" was a publicity stunt done by

2944-595: The name was changed to Connally Air Force Base in memory of Col. James T. Connally, a local pilot killed in Japan in 1945. The name changed again in 1951 to the James Connally Air Force Base. The base closed in May 1966 and is now the location of Texas State Technical College , formerly Texas State Technical Institute, since 1965. The airfield is still in operation, now known as TSTC Waco Airport , and

3008-446: The population in 2010, down from 66.6% in 1980. In 2000, the census recorded 42,279 households, of which 29.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 38.4% were married couples living together, 16.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 41.4% were not families. Around 31.1% of all households were made up of individuals, and 10.9% had someone living alone at 65 years of age or older. The average household size

3072-433: The school's main building burned down in 1910. TCU was offered a 50-acre (200,000 m ) campus and $ 200,000 by the city of Fort Worth to relocate there. Racial segregation was common in Waco. For example, Greenwood Cemetery was established in the 1870s as a segregated burial place. Black graves were divided from white ones by a fence which remained standing until 2016. In the 1890s, William Cowper Brann published

3136-573: The song " The Old Chisholm Trail ." Among those who have covered the song are Gene Autry , Girls of the Golden West , Woody Guthrie , Michael Martin Murphey , Tex Ritter , and Roy Rogers . Lead Belly (Huddie Ledbetter) also covered this song, although his version was titled "When I Was A Cowboy". Nova Scotia-born Wilf Carter recorded a version of the song, titled, "Come A Ty-ya Yippie Yi Yo". Many schools in this region have been named after

3200-423: The spring after the rains stimulated the growth of green grasses for the grazing cattle. The spring drives, with those rains and higher water levels with the runoff, always meant more danger at the river crossings, which had no bridges. The half-wild Texas Longhorn cattle were contrary and prone to stampede with little provocation. The days of longest sunlight, near mid-June, were also an important consideration in

3264-603: The timing of drives. In addition to natural dangers, the cowboys and drovers encountered rustlers and occasional conflicts with Native Americans. The cattle drives disrupted the hunting and cultivation of crops in Indian Territory. Tribal members demanded that the trail bosses pay a toll of 10 cents per head to local tribes for the right to cross Indian lands (Oklahoma at that time was Indian Territory, governed from Fort Smith, Arkansas ). The only woman known to run her own cattle drive traveled from Texas to Wichita using

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3328-482: The trail crossed into Indian Territory (present-day west-central Oklahoma ) near Red River Station and entered Kansas near Caldwell . Through Oklahoma, the route of U.S. Highway 81 follows the Chisholm Trail through present-day towns of El Reno , Duncan , Chickasha, and Enid . Historians consider the Chisholm Trail to have started either at Donna or San Antonio. From 1867 to 1871, the trail ended in Abilene, Kansas, but as railroads incrementally built southward,

3392-560: The trail is located in the downtown area. Lockhart, Texas , in Caldwell County , holds a four-day festival on the second weekend of June, to celebrate its place on the Chisholm Trail. Newton, Kansas holds a three- to four-day Chisholm Trail Festival , combining it with the annual Fourth of July celebration. In 2014, the North Texas Tollway Authority constructed a 26-mile-long toll road named after

3456-678: The trail, the Chisholm Trail Parkway . It connects downtown Fort Worth to the nearby city of Cleburne in Johnson County . In 2017, the Texas Historical Commission released The Chisholm Trail: Exploring the Folklore and Legacy , an online tour and mobile app. The tour includes audio tracks and short videos that retell the history of communities and local heritage in towns and cities that line

3520-618: The trail. Kingfisher, Oklahoma , has a life-size statue of Jesse Chisholm in the middle of downtown, as well as the Chisholm Trail Museum and Governor Seay Mansion which gives a clear timeline of the trail. Yukon, Oklahoma , has the Chisholm Trail Watering Hole and historic marker, while Jesse Chisholm's gravesite is a bit further north outside Geary, Oklahoma . A mural in Enid, Oklahoma depicting

3584-440: The year. The record low temperature is −5 °F (−21 °C), set on January 31, 1949; the record high temperature is 114 °F (46 °C), set on July 23, 2018. As of the 2020 United States census , there were 138,486 people, 50,108 households, and 29,014 families residing in the city. At the census of 2010, 124,805 people resided in the city, organized into 51,452 households and 27,115 families. The population density

3648-406: Was an attractive alternative to the Kansas Pacific Railroad . Between 1876 and 1884 some drives went along the Great Western Cattle Trail instead of the Chisholm Trail. In Texas, hundreds of feeder trails headed north to one of the main cattle trails. In the early 1840s, most cattle were driven up the Shawnee Trail . The Chisholm Trail was previously used by Indian hunting and raiding parties;

3712-424: Was an expansion market for the 2010 season. It was rumored they would play in the Heart O' Texas Coliseum. However, the league broke up into three separate leagues, and subsequently, a team did not come to Waco in any of the new leagues. Professional baseball first came to Waco in 1889 with the formation of the Waco Tigers , a member of the Texas League . The Tigers were renamed the Navigators in 1905, and later

3776-400: Was calculated as 2.49 and the average family size 3.19. In 2000, 25.4% of the population was under the age of 18, 20.3% from 18 to 24, 25.0% from 25 to 44, 16.0% from 45 to 64, and 13.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 28 years. For every 100 females, there were 91.4 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 87.3 males. The median income for a household in

3840-407: Was further designated the official Hall of Fame for the Rangers and renamed the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum . Renovations by the Waco government earned this building green status, the first Waco government-led project of its nature. The construction project has fallen under scrutiny for expanding the building over unmarked human graves. In 1978, bones were discovered emerging from the mud at

3904-417: Was planned for the suburb of Bellmead . The American Basketball Association had a franchise for part of the 2006 season, the Waco Wranglers. The team played at Reicher Catholic High School and practiced at Texas State Technical College. Previous professional sports franchises in Waco have proven unsuccessful. The Waco Marshals of the National Indoor Football League lasted less than two months amidst

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3968-437: Was recorded as 1,350.6 people per square mile (521.5/km ), with 45,819 housing units at an average density of 544.2 per square mile (210.1/km ). The 2000 racial makeup of the city was 60.8% White, 22.7% African American, 1.4% Asian, 0.5% Native American, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 12.4% from other races, and 2.3% from two or more races. About 23.6% of the population was Hispanic or Latino of any race. Non-Hispanic Whites were 45.8% of

4032-413: Was shot , his body dragged down Franklin street by a crowd some 6,000 strong and the corpse then burned in the public square behind city hall. In 1923, Waco's sheriff Leslie Stegall protected Roy Mitchell , an African American coerced into confessing to multiple murders, from mob lynching. Mitchell was the last Texan to be publicly executed in Texas, and also the last to be hanged before the introduction of

4096-406: Was used by Air Force One when former US President George W. Bush visited his Prairie Chapel Ranch , also known as the Western White House , in Crawford , Texas. In 1951, Harold Goodman founded the American Income Life Insurance Company . On May 11, 1953, a violent F5 tornado hit downtown Waco , killing 114. As of 2011, it remains the 11th-deadliest tornado in U.S. history and tied for

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